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THE CLAUSE AS A PRECEDENT.

ment of the Northwest would give. Moreover, as the clause was coupled with a proviso for the return of fugitive slaves, it possessed a compensatory element of no small importance. As the fugitive slave clause had been inserted in the plan in 1785, the matter when finally it came up in Congress had all the weight practically of an established precedent.1

Had the Constitution remained to this day exactly as it went forth to Congress and the States in 1787, the northwest ordinance would have passed into oblivion long ago. Even its fundamental importance, as the basis of later territorial organization, could not have given it the important place in our constitutional history which it attained. Because it was the first national act limiting slavery, and its anti-slavery clause was adopted word for word in the organic acts of all territories organized from Pennsylvania to the Pacific, and, when these were admitted as States, was copied into their constitutions; and because nearly eighty years after its adoption, its anti-slavery clause became the Thirteenth Amendment to the Constitution of the United States, its importance is not secondary to any slavery provision contemporaneous with it in the Constitution.

Its importance is in no wise diminished by the interpretation which Madison put upon it in the Federalist, that in proceeding to form new States, to erect temporary governments, to appoint their officers and to prescribe the conditions on which these new States should be admitted into the confederacy, Congress had proceeded "without the least color of constitutional authority."2 Nor is its importance diminished by the fact that Chief-Justice Taney

1 Barrett, 79-80.

2 No. XXXVIII. It appeared in the New York Packet, January 15, 1788

RICHARD HENRY LEE.

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in his opinion in the Dred Scott case, seventy years later, sustained Madison's views. The great ordinance originated at the time of the Constitution and almost with it, and though, later it was declared unconstitutional, its anti-slavery provision had already received public approval for three generations and had come to be ranked among the accepted precedents in American government.

When the Constitution, on the twentieth of September,2 was presented to Congress, opposition there was already well organized. At its head was Richard Henry Lee of Virginia, whose chief objection was the evident purpose of the new plan to organize a national instead of a federal government. He left nothing within his power unturned to defeat it. In Congress he was an obstructionist, pleading for a Bill of Rights; out of Congress, he was an agitator and pamphleteer, attacking the plan as a violation of the principles of republican government. His conduct, whether in refusing to accept an appointment to the Federal Convention or in his persistent and almost passionate hostility to the Constitution was no compliment to his sagacity as a statesman. Lee was supported in Congress by several members, who carried home the spirit of their opposition, and in their own States became its head and front. The consent which Congress had given to the calling of the Federal Convention was a sufficient answer to any objections on its part, now, to submit the plan to the States; and happily the opposition was in the minority. The friends of the plan in Congress, chief of whom was Madison, were impatient for Congress to express its formal approval and refer the Constitution to the legislatures.

1 19 Howard, 447. For an account of the case of Dred Scott see pp. 536-551; and for an account of the adoption of the thirteenth amendment, see Vol. III.

2 1787.

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THE ANTI-FEDERALISTS.

They wished a unanimous submission, just as the friends of the Constitution had wished unanimous approval by the States in convention.

Melanchton Smith of New York, and his colleagues, were inflexible that, in submitting the plan, Congress should use no words of approval; and in this spirit,-the Anti-Federalists, consenting to unanimity, and the Federalists, that the Constitution should go forth without words of approval, on the twenty-eighth of the month, Congress unanimously referred the Constitution to the legislatures of the several States, to be by them submitted to conventions, chosen expressly for the purpose, as the Philadelphia meeting had advised.1 This Convention, composed of the first characters in the country; assembling with closed doors and at a time when the fortunes of the Confederation were at their lowest ebb, had awakened highest expectation among all ranks of people. Washington and Franklin possessed a world-wide reputation; and other members, no less zealous for political reforms, were, without exception, the leading men of their States. The long labor in which they engaged had of itself awakened wide interest in the result. What thought the public gave to the Convention seems to have been favorable and confiding; it was convinced that affairs could not be worse managed under any government which the Convention was likely to propose than they had been under the confederation, an efficient government on republican principles must be established.2

But there is no evidence that the people expected a plan

1 Journals of Congress, September 28, 1787. For the resolution of Congress, submitting the Constitution, and the circular letter of Secretary, transmitting it to the governors, see Documentary History, I, 22-23.

2 Carrington to Jefferson, June 9, 1787, and to Madison, June 13.

SENTIMENT OF THE COUNTRY.

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which would involve the complete surrender of State sovereignty, nor is there evidence of serious apprehension that republican principles were in danger. From the best evidence we have, it seems that at the time when the Constitution went to the States, public opinion in Virginia was uncertain. In New England and the middle States, where the greater number of newspapers were published, controversies over the new plan immediately sprang up and continued to the end. The opposition centered its attack upon the omission of a Bill of Rights. In New England generally, the plan was favorably received, though Rhode Island was an exception. New York was divided; New Jersey was reported favorable; in Pennsylvania there was a strong opposition. Maryland was said to be decidedly in favor of the Constitution; Georgia too, was supposed to be friendly; the news was less encouraging from the Carolinas,1 though it was not thought that the Constitution would be seriously opposed in South Carolina. Foreign observers could not understand why there should be any opposition; to them the alternative in America was consolidation or anarchy.2 Undoubtedly the mass of the people who gave any attention to the matter, associated the name of Washington with the new plan, and already selected him as the head of the new government. That his life was spared at this time made the more perfect Union possible.

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But the public was not left undisturbed by the opposition. Richard Henry Lee was indefatigable in hostile speaking and writing, and on his way home from Congress,

1 Madison to Randolph, October 21, 1787; Carrington to Jefferson, October 23, 1787; Gouverneur Morris to Washington, October 30, 1787; Elliot, I, 505.

2 Lord Dorchester and Lord Sydney, November 8, 1787. 3 A. Donald to Jefferson, November 12, 1787.

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FEDERALISTS AND ANTI-FEDERALISTS.

not only harangued the populace, as at Wilmington, Delaware,1 cautioning against hasty adoption, but also distributed inflammatory letters2 which were the most popular and probably most influential of all attacks against the plan.3

Already the names Federalists and Anti-Federalists were used to distinguish the friends and the enemies of the plan. The policy of the Anti-Federalists was to persuade the people that the Constitution violated the principles of republican government, and, especially, that it antagonized and endangered the State constitutions. The Anti-Federalists did not tell the people how faithfully the Philadelphia Convention had labored to avoid antagonism with these State instruments. As we have followed the making of the plan we have seen how closely it conformed to precedents in the State constitutions, but these instruments were not as familiar to the people as one might perhaps imagine, for they were no more freely circulated than the decisions of the courts. It was the policy of the Federalists to persuade the people that the Constitution not only was constructed on republican principles, but that it conformed closely to the State instruments and could not fail to remedy the defects of the Confederation, secure the common defense and promote the general welfare. Even at this early period the population of the country was divided into two classes, the urban and the rural. The first inhabited the coast region and

1 Samuel Powell to Washington, November 13, 1787. 2 Signed "Federal Farmer."

3 His letters from a "Federal Farmer" to the "Republican" are reprinted in Paul Leicester Ford's collection of Pamphlets on the Constitution of the United States, published during its discussion by the people; Brooklyn, New York, 1888.

4 This is the general argument of the Federalist, see Nos. I-XXIII.

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